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Design considerations for a dynamic metamaterial aperture for computational imaging at microwave frequencies
118
Citations
41
References
2016
Year
EngineeringNegative-index MetamaterialDynamic ApertureMetasurfacesMetamaterialsElectromagnetic MetamaterialsMetamaterial ApertureComputational ImagingComputational ElectromagneticsDance ImagesRadiation ImagingRadiologyHigh Impedance SurfacesHealth SciencesMedical ImagingSynthetic Aperture RadarAntennaOptical AntennasMicrowave AntennaMicrowave DiagnosticsMillimeter Wave TechnologyRadarDynamic Metamaterial ApertureDesign ConsiderationsBiomedical ImagingMetamaterial ResonatorsDynamic Metamaterials
We investigate the imaging capabilities of a one-dimensional, dynamic, metamaterial aperture that operates at the lower part of K-band microwave frequencies (17.5–21.1 GHz). The dynamic aperture consists of a microstrip transmission line with an array of radiating, complementary, subwavelength metamaterial irises patterned into the upper conductor. Diodes integrated into the metamaterial resonators provide voltage-controlled switching of the resonant metamaterial elements between radiating and nonradiating states. Applying a series of on/off patterns to the metamaterial resonators produces a series of distinct radiation patterns that sequentially illuminate a scene. The backscattered signal contains encoded scene information over a set of measurements that can be postprocessed to reconstruct an image. We present a series of design considerations for the dynamic aperture, as well as a series of experimental studies performed using a dynamic aperture prototype. High-fidelity, real-time, diffraction-limited imaging using the prototype is demonstrated. The dynamic aperture suggests a path to fast and reliable imaging with low-cost and versatile hardware, for a variety of applications including security screening, biomedical diagnostics, and through-wall imaging.
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